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April 29, 2026 – How Do I Teach My Child to Write Legibly?

by rneace-4507 / Tuesday, 28 April 2026 / Published in
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How Do I Teach My Child to Write Legibly?

April 29, 2026

Gena Suarez
Chicken Scratch to Cursive: Getting There

Beth Mora
Honoring the Growth and Development of Handwriting

Alexandria Letkeman
Helping Them Slow Down

Dianne Craft
Why Smart Kids Struggle with Handwriting and What’s Really Happening in the Brain

Gena Suarez, publisher of The Old Schoolhouse Magazine

Hey, Mama!

Gena Suarez, Publisher of TOS


Chicken Scratch to Cursive: Getting There

Hey, Mama!

None of my children would win a penmanship award, and I say that with full love and zero regret. Some took longer than others. One of my younger ones had neater penmanship than a sibling years ahead of them, before that sibling ever caught up. In fact, he never really caught up to her. And honestly, the girls seemed to take to it more naturally than the boys. That’s just the truth of it.

What I learned over thirty‑five years of homeschooling is this: there is no single method that works for every child. And that’s okay. The goal is to keep trying until something clicks.

Here are a few things that helped us. Read aloud to them while they sit close, following along with their eyes. Letter recognition builds this way naturally, and it connects reading and writing in a way that feels like anything but a lesson. Make it fun when you can. Playful practice beats a tense drill every time. And write out Scripture together. It hits two targets at once—you’re building penmanship and engraving God’s Word on their hearts at the same time.

“Thy word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against thee.” (Psalm 119:11).

When one approach stops working, drop it without guilt and pick up something else. SchoolhouseTeachers.com is wonderful for exactly this reason. A family membership means no limits, no per-course fees, as well as the freedom to try a completely different approach without spending another dime.

Take heart. Handwriting won’t perfect itself. But a patient, persistent parent? That’s the real curriculum.

His hand is on your head, Mama. Always.

—Gena

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GUEST CONTRIBUTOR


Nikki Wilson, OTR/L
Rhythm & Writing: The Handwriting Program
rhythmandwriting.com

Teaching Handwriting – Minimize the Monotony with Music!

Whatever your homeschool reasoning, and whether you’re new to this or blue (in the face) to this, your goal is to prepare your kiddos to become successful adults. Underlying skills must therefore be mastered, and even in our high-tech, Android vs. Apple world, handwriting is one of them.

Despite the proven significance of handwriting development, this skill is often overlooked and under taught in public schools; our homeschool parents know better!

Regardless of our rationale and explanations, some of our kids hate to write! Whether they claim their eyes or hands hurt (every time) or just refuse to participate, for some, handwriting practice is torture; either that, or it’s just downright boring. The good thing is that it doesn’t have to be: try minimizing the monotony with music!

Rhythm & Writing is a multi-sensory handwriting curriculum that teaches printing with rhymes, music, & videos. It is effective with kids just learning to write and kids who don’t like to write. It can also be adapted for students with special needs.

Experience the excitement as your kiddos learn to print while rocking out, hip-hopping, smooth jazzing, and country cooling to the vibes of Rhythm & Writing. Try it today . . . It works and your kids will love it!


Beth Mora

Honoring the Growth and Development of Handwriting


I love raising my kids from their first breath to adulthood. Sure, it has ups and downs, but I marvel at their growth and development and how God makes it all happen. I’m glad I homeschool and get to see growth in so many different areas, including handwriting.

Being real though . . .

I get frustrated when growth doesn’t happen as quickly as I would like. My patience wanes towards my child. It’s a very unfair practice on my part. I need God’s help to enjoy my child’s growth and development without hindering it! I want to love all the ages and stages!

Enjoy the Scribbles!: Let the markers, chalk, and crayons flow. This is the first stage of handwriting. 

Take dictation: While your child is in the scribble stage, begin turning their spoken words into written words by writing for them.

Hand over Hand: Place your hand over theirs to begin developing muscle memory. 

Follow Me: Have them watch you write vertical, horizontal, diagonal lines, and circles, and then ask your child to do it. 

Trace My Letters: Write words or sentences, and then have your child trace them.

Begin copywork: Expand to copy well-written sentences daily. 

Engage in the Art Form of Handwriting: Have them learn calligraphy and artistic lettering. 

Practice Handwriting for a Purpose: Legible handwriting emerges when there is a purpose to the practice. At the end of the week, have your child choose their best handwriting papers and send them to a relative or friend, or craft a keepsake book or special card. They will probably practice more diligently and their handwriting will, no doubt, improve greatly! 

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About the author

Beth Mora is a staff writer for The Old Schoolhouse® Magazine and lesson designer for SchoolhouseTeachers.com. She is the creator/teacher-on-camera for Here to Help Learning’s Homeschool Writing Program Grades 1-6, and a homeschool conference and women’s events speaker. Her blog, Home To Home, is one of her favorite places to encourage others. Everything she does is done to honor her Lord and Savior, Jesus.


Alexandria Letkeman

Helping Them Slow Down

If your high schooler’s handwriting looks like a seismograph during an earthquake, you’re not alone. They already know how to write, so you don’t need to teach them again from scratch. The challenge is helping them slow down.

By high school, most students have the mechanical foundation for legible handwriting. What derails them is speed. When teens write quickly, rushing through notes or an essay, letter formation breaks down. Intentional practice at a slower pace is the only fix. Try timed copying exercises where the goal is neatness, not speed. Give them a paragraph to copy in five minutes, then ask them to do the same paragraph in eight. The difference is usually pretty striking.

Make It Purposeful

Teenagers respond better when there’s a real reason behind a task. Assign handwritten work that actually matters: thank-you notes, journaling, or a handwritten draft of an essay. When the audience is real, and the stakes feel genuine, kids naturally invest more care.

Consistency over Intensity

Ten minutes of careful deliberate handwriting practice three times a week beats a single hour of frustrated drilling. Keep sessions short, low-pressure, and tied to real writing tasks whenever possible.

Legibility is a habit. With a little patience and the right structure, it’s one your high schooler can absolutely develop. 

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About the author

Alexandria Letkeman began homeschooling with her family in middle school and has recently graduated with honors in 2020. Together with her husband, she has developed a passion for financial literacy, classical writing, and the freedom that homeschooling provides. In pursuit of those passions, she and her husband aim to continue the legacy of The HomeScholar and continue helping homeschool parents homeschool with confidence. One day, Alex plans to start a homesteading farm in Texas featuring mini cows.


Dianne Craft, MA, CNHP



Why Smart Kids Struggle with Handwriting and What’s Really Happening in the Brain 

If your bright child can tell detailed stories and explain ideas beautifully, but their handwriting seems tangled or exhausting for them to produce, you are not alone. Many homeschool moms assume messy handwriting means a child is lazy, unmotivated, or simply needs more practice. In reality, the struggle is often dysgraphia, a very common and greatly misunderstood learning glitch.

Dysgraphia is not a motivation problem. It’s a blocked writing gate caused by a disconnect between the brain and the hand. We often refer to these children as “gifted with a glitch.” They may read above grade level, think deeply, and explain ideas beautifully out loud, yet freeze when asked to write. Writing drains their “battery energy,” because their brain must focus on letter direction, spacing, and formation all at once instead of thinking about ideas.

A key root issue is difficulty internalizing left and right directionality. This shows up as reversals, poor spacing, slow copying, mixed capital and lowercase letters, minimal written output, and even struggles with visual/spatial activities like tying shoes or riding a bike. The child isn’t “sloppy”—their brain is working overtime just to control the pencil.

In many cases, more handwriting practice alone rarely fixes dysgraphia. The solution is helping the brain connect across the midline, allowing writing to move from the “Concentrating Brain” into the “Automatic Brain.”

Drawing from over thirty years of experience working with children, I have consistently seen that midline therapy is the most effective method for establishing these crucial neural pathways. As directionality becomes automatic, handwriting improves, reversals fade, and children finally gain the freedom to think and write at the same time.

Your child doesn’t need more pressure, just the right brain connections. And with the right tools, those writing gates can open beautifully.

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About the author

Dianne Craft, M.A., was a nationally recognized special education educator and pioneer in alternative teaching strategies for struggling learners. With more than 25 years of experience, she helped thousands of families understand and overcome learning challenges through her signature Right Brain and “Healing Teaching” approach. Her work continues through The Dianne Craft Right Brain Learning System, where her family and trained team carry forward her methods and mission, equipping parents and educators to help children learn with confidence, success, and renewed hope. https://diannecraft.org/


How are cursive and copywork connected? Should you include them in your homeschool day? Read about cursive and copywork and discover some useful resources at HomeschoolingFinds.com.


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SchoolhouseTeachers.com Corner
Did you know?
Every class is INCLUDED for ultimate members! 
No limits.

Written expression is important, and it’s exciting to be able to read what our children are thinking and learning! SchoolhouseTeachers.com has a variety of reading and writing courses, including the Color Block Handwriting course for students who are learning to write letters for the first time as well as those who need some extra support. Everyday Copywork has worksheets in English and Spanish, with nearly 200 excerpts for students to practice writing in print or cursive!


The story is free. The challenge goes deeper.

Read the daily 250 Days Before 250 Years stories at no cost—then join the full experience with an ST membership to participate in the challenge and essay contest, where one student will be awarded the grand-prize BBQ grill.
https://schoolhouseteachers.com/250-days/


Phonics, grammar, games, Latin, study skills, university options, math, special needs help, and more! Here is a guide to great home education resources. Download the app at TOSApps.com.


FREE PDF Download

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In the pages of this FREE WeE-book™, you’ll find answers to your questions and important insights, guiding your path to that rewarding homeschool convention experience.


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